ABOUT WHITE LIONS

White lions were first documented in 1928 in the Timbavati region of South Africa (e.g. near the Kruger National Park). The white lions are not albino but carry a recessive white gene; some have blue eyes. In 2002, no known white lions remained in the wild but a White Lion Reintroduction Program was showing some success by 2009.

Prey

Much of lions' hunting is done at night and in the very early dawn. Female lions account for about 85-90% of the pride's hunting. They usually work together to ambush prey, although lions will also hunt alone. Lions often steal kills from hyenas, wild dogs, cheetahs, leopards (and sometimes other lions), with scavenged food providing more than 50% of their diets.

Their larger prey animals include antelopes, impala, zebras, wildebeest, giraffe, buffalo, wild hogs, rhinos and hippos. They may also attack elephants when food is scarce. Lions further feed on hares, birds, reptiles, crocodiles, pythons, fur seals, baboons, porcupines and ostrich eggs. Their hunting success rate is low, so lions may only eat every two or three days; they can eat almost 79 lbs of meat in one feeding. Most lions drink water daily if available, but they can go four or five days without it.

Habitat

A pride's territory can be 15 to 400 square miles in area, comprising grassy plains, savannahs, scrub and dense bush, or dry open woodlands. They do not live in moist tropical forests (i.e., the "king of the jungle" does not live in the jungle). Cooperation by males and females in defending their territory is thought to explain why lions live in groups ; their high density requires control over good habitats.

Range

Lions once roamed most of Africa and parts of Asia, the Middle East and Europe. Today they are found only in parts of sub-Saharan Africa, with a very small population of Asiatic lions in India. Habitat loss means that they now occupy about 10% of their former range in Africa.

Biology

Weight

265 to 575 lbs for males and about 260-400 lbs for females

Reproductive Season

Mating takes place year round. Males often bite females in the neck during mating; copulation lasts 8-68 seconds (averaging 21 seconds!) and lions may mate from 60-100 times per 24 hours!

Gestation Period

110 days

Litter Size

2-4 cubs

Age at Independence


Sexual Maturity

2-4 years

Longevity

12-18 years in the wild and 20-25 years in captivity

Social Structure

Lions are the only large exotic cats that live in family units, called prides; these families can include as few as two and as many as 40 members. Within an established pride, members rarely fight but rather show affection to one another.


Principal Threats

Lions have long been killed as part of tribal rituals and for their supposed medicinal and magical powers; it is feared that they may replace tigers as sources of ingredients for Chinese medicines. Lions are also threatened by burgeoning human populations which result in loss of habitat as well as hunting, poisoning and poaching by livestock ranchers. Trophy hunting is another threat to their wellbeing, with white lions being especially popular for canned hunting.

In the wild, lions face an indirect threat from climate change called co-infection, in which they acquire both canine distemper and a tick-borne parasitic disease during times of severe drought; together, the diseases cause high mortality. In 1994, the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania lost 30% of its lions within a few weeks. Such droughts are predicted to become more common. In addition to distemper, most African lions eventually acquire feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), though they do not become sick from it; they also suffer parasitic diseases. Hyenas and leopards will kill lion cubs. Weak, sick and wounded adults may be attacked by hyenas.


Role in Environment

Lions are a keystone species. If lions were to disappear, populations of the species they prey on would increase dramatically. The result would be excessive competition for food between the prey species, and also between these prey species and livestock.

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